Thursday, March 15, 2012

Blanco like Beckham? Fire touts 'unique' catch; Mexican star shuns comparison of marquee players

Fire president John Guppy loved the sign a fan brought to thewelcoming ceremony for Cuauhtemoc Blanco at Toyota Park. It read,"Who needs Beckham when you have Temo?"

Blanco, who signed a three-year, $6million contract on Tuesday,follows England's former captain, David Beckham, as one of MajorLeague Soccer's first "designated players." Each team can go aboveits salary cap to bring in one high-profile player.

Blanco's contract pales in comparison to the one Beckham signedwith the Los Angeles Galaxy, but that hasn't kept him from beingtabbed "the Mexican Beckham" by Chicago fans and media.

"I wouldn't call him the Mexican Beckham," Guppy said, "but he'svery …

A look at Molson Coors 3Q results by unit

Here's how Molson Coors Brewing Co.'s units performed in the third-quarter:

CANADA: Net revenue rose 9 percent to $539.8 million, while volume rose 2.5 percent. Sales to retailers rose 0.4 percent.

BRITAIN: Net revenue fell 7.4 percent to $313.4 million, …

Strong finish puts No. 25 Cincinnati in mix

CINCINNATI (AP) — Power forward Yancy Gates was feuding with the coach and hardly getting onto the court. Cincinnati appeared headed for another late-season meltdown that would keep it out of the NCAA tournament again.

But everything changed in a six-game span.

The Bearcats (24-7, 11-7 Big East) have won five of their last six, knocking off Louisville, Connecticut and Georgetown twice. They put themselves in line for their first NCAA tournament appearance in six years and moved back into the rankings at No. 25 on Monday.

In three weeks, their season did a 180-degree turnaround.

"Since that moment," coach Mick Cronin said, "they've really dug in and played …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Network president prepares for big changes, busy life

GRAND RAPIDS - Kym Duursma has been on vacation - and she deserves it. Since she took over as president of The Network, Grand Rapids' LGBT center, last December, she has been hard at work creating little changes in preparation for a big future.

Previously, Duursma's involvement with The Network had been minimal. As an educator at Planned Parenthood, a job she still holds, she would often do sexuality education with people in prison and substance abuse treatment programs. Her job carried her to The Network, where she began doing sex and HIV workshops. She claims that the two jobs fit together perfectly. "It all meshes," she asserts of her work at Planned Parenthood and The Network. …

Wife of Cuba's Acting Leader Dies at 77

HAVANA - Vilma Espin Guillois, the wife of acting President Raul Castro and a former rebel fighter who served for decades as first lady of the Cuban revolution, was mourned across the island Tuesday.

Espin, 77, died Monday afternoon after "the long illness she was afflicted with" worsened in recent weeks, according to Cuban state television. Authorities did not disclose the illness, but she was said to have suffered from severe circulatory problems in recent years.

An official period of mourning was in effect through 10 p.m. Tuesday as Cubans remembered Espin both as a guerrilla fighter who helped bring her future husband Raul and brother-in-law Fidel to power a …

Receptionist a 'hero' in New York center massacre

The two receptionists at the U.S. community center barely had time to react when a gunman stormed in the front door and shot them at close range before firing on a roomful of immigrants taking a citizenship class.

One receptionist survived, playing dead, before crawling under a desk and calling 911.

Police Chief Joseph Zikuski said she stayed on the phone for 90 minutes, "feeding us information constantly," despite a serious wound in the abdomen.

"She's a hero in her own right," he said.

The gunman killed 13 people _ a dozen in the classroom _ before apparently killing himself.

Four people were critically …

Inflation up here

WASHINGTON While the cost of living in Chicago rose 0.7 percentlast month, it increased only 0.3 percent nationwide, the governmentsaid today. The national increase is the first inflation break forconsumers since Iraq's Aug. 2 invasion of Kuwait sent oil pricesskyrocketing.

In Chicago, food and beverage costs were up 0.8 percent. Alsohurting the pocketbook was an 8.2 percent increase in gas heatingcosts. That contributed to an over-all 0.7 percent rise in Novemberhousing costs. Apparel costs showed the steepest increase overOctober figures, rising 1 percent in the area.

For the first 11 months of 1990, the consumer price index shotup 6.1 percent in Chicago, the …

Philippine leader vows punishment in graft scandal

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — President Benigno Aquino III vowed Sunday to punish officers linked to a high-profile corruption scandal and ordered a new military chief to make reforms aimed at halting large-scale graft in one of Asia's weakest militaries.

Aquino used a speech at a graduation ceremony at the prestigious Philippine Military Academy — traditionally focused on anti-insurgency and national security issues — to admonish the 196 graduating cadets to resist graft.

"I hope you can say 'no' when somebody dumps a truckload of money in front of you," Aquino said to loud applause at the academy, patterned after the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. "You're here not to get …

No tall tale: Dubai to open world's highest tower

Dubai is set to open the world's tallest building amid tight security on Monday, celebrating the tower as a bold feat on the world stage despite the city state's shaky financial footing.

But the final height of the Burj Dubai _ Arabic for Dubai Tower _ remained a closely guarded secret on the eve of its opening. At a reported height of 2,684 feet (818 meters), it long ago vanquished its nearest rival, the Taipei 101 in Taiwan.

The Burj's record-seeking developers didn't stop there.

The building boasts the most stories and highest occupied floor of any building in the world, and ranks as the world's tallest structure, beating out a television mast …

Train hits truck

Ohio man indicted in factory shooting deaths of 2

CLEVELAND (AP) — A grand jury has indicted a man on two counts of aggravated murder in the shooting deaths of two Cleveland factory employees, including a woman he'd been accused of stalking.

Cuyahoga (ky-uh-HOH'-guh) County prosecutor Bill Mason says 44-year-old Pedro Rodriguez could face the death penalty if convicted on the charges returned Monday.

Court records don't reflect a defense attorney handling the …

Tigers put LHP Robertson on DL, call up LHP French

The Detroit Tigers placed left-handed reliever Nate Robertson on the 15-day disabled list before Thursday's game at Minnesota and called up left-hander Luke French from Triple-A Toledo.

Robertston was put on the DL retroactive to May 6 with a muscle strain in his lower back.

Manager Jim Leyland said Robertson hurt his back while doing squats after a game at Cleveland last weekend and likely won't be ready for at least another seven or eight days.

Had the team known the injury was that serious, Leyland said, right-hander Juan Rincon probably would have stuck around a little longer. He was …

Ex-actor slain on the streets Joined gang after getting break in Oprah movie

In a 1993 television movie, Mark Lane Jr. played a teenager whoseonscreen mom, Oprah Winfrey, chastised him for wearing a Chicagogang's colors.

The 14-year-old actor, who edged out more than 1,000 tryouts forthe role of Lafeyette, survived the lure of the streets in the movie,"There Are No Children Here."

But in real life, the attraction of gangs proved too great andcost the Chicago man his life. He was gunned down two days beforeThanksgiving.

Lane was shot several times in a year-old Lexus GS300 luxury sedanand crashed into a gas station near Harrison and Independence on theWest Side.

Police have said the shooting appeared to be gang-related. Theyare still hunting for Lane's killer.

Lane, 22, was a self-admitted gang member whose nicknames included"Lil' Mark," "Shorty" and "Popsy," court records show. His rap sheetincludes three drug convictions dating to 1996.

Lane was a victim of the same violence the ABC Sunday moviespotlighted, said Alex Kotlowitz, author of the book that inspiredthe film.

"It saddens me. It's been 10 years since my book came out," hesaid, adding that a teen he befriended while doing research for thebook was killed this past spring on the West Side. "The one thingthat seems to persist with such stubbornness is this violence."

Lane's death also stunned a relative who remembered him as a boywho helped her with gardening and attended church with her.

"The West Side environment was not good for Mark," said the woman,who asked not to be named. "He was a victim of the environment. Hewas a nice little boy with a future, and unfortunately things didn'tpan out for him."

Lane had learned of a casting call for the movie from hisprincipal at Avalon Park Elementary on the South Side.

The entire school rallied around the young star when he was pickedfor the plum co-starring role, said his seventh-grade teacher, JoyceDrain.

His signature smile, warm eyes and bubbly personality convincedtalent agents to pick him, Drain said.

"He had braces on and when he smiled it was like a neon light,"she said. "You just wanted Mark to be around you."

Over her 28 years of teaching, Lane still sticks out in her mind.He was always eager to work on stage productions at the school, Drainsaid.

She still remembers when Lane and another student arranged asurprise party for her birthday.

It was the first time a student had done that for her. "He wasalways thinking up something to do.

"It's a tragedy to know someone that is young and gifted who wasstruck down in the prime of his life," she said. "His mother was uphere all the time, not because of any discipline problems."

Friends and family members could not explain how he gravitated tothe life of a gangster on the West Side.

Over the last five years, police have repeatedly stopped cars hewas driving and allegedly found him carrying drugs and thousands ofdollars in cash.

Among his convictions was a guilty plea in 1996 to selling cocaineand heroin near Cabrini-Green. He was sentenced to a year'sprobation.

In 1999, he was charged with battery after allegedly punching a 20-year-old woman in the back, leaving her with bruises. The case wastossed out after she failed to show up at a court hearing.

There was no sign of the trouble to come in an interview he gavethe Chicago Sun-Times in 1993, when he said his grandmotherencouraged him to take the role in the movie about life in the HenryHorner Homes.

He had more than seven casting calls before he landed the part--ahuge leap from his previous experience in school plays.

At the time, the teenager dreamed of joining the ROTC and becoming a lawyer, but he also planned to continue acting.

Winfrey taught him to be aware of the camera and not step out ofthe camera's range, the child actor said.

"She's real nice and supportive," he said of Winfrey, who wasunavailable for comment Tuesday.

In the movie, he played one of three sons of Winfrey's character,LaJoe, a single mother who counts her sons when she hears gunfireringing in the air outside their cramped public housing apartment.

In one scene, Lane's character, Lafeyette, tells a schoolmate notto wear gang colors near them when they're playing and knocks a goldbaseball cap off his friend's head.

He also warns his younger brother, Pharoah, to stay away fromgangs.

"Don't you ever get down with that, you promise?" his charactersays.

In the next scene, their schoolmate is shot--the gold baseball capback on his head.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Glossary of Cajun and Creole culinary terms

As displaced New Orleans cooks spread across the U.S. in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, they are bringing traditional Cajun and Creole fare to new locales. Here is a glossary of Cajun and Creole culinary terms to help decipher the menu:

_Cajun: A combination of French and Southern cooking styles that features robust flavors and relies heavily on animal fat and dark roux, a slow-cooked mixture of flour and fat used to thicken soups and sauces.

_Creole: Similar to Cajun but with heavy emphasis on butter and cream. Creole cooking uses more tomatoes, while Cajun involves more spices. Both rely on the "holy trinity," chopped green peppers, onions and celery.

_Beignet: A square of dough, deep fried and dusted with powdered sugar, served three at a time and with coffee at New Orleans' Cafe du Monde.

_Gumbo: A thick stew of meat and vegetables that can have many ingredients, including okra, tomatoes, onions, chicken, sausage, ham, shrimp, crab or oysters. All good gumbos begin with a dark roux.

_Jambalaya: A rice-based dish with a variety of ingredients including tomatoes, onions, green peppers and almost any kind of meat, poultry or shellfish. The dish varies widely from cook to cook.

_Etouffee: A silky, rich stew of crawfish and vegetables served over white rice. Its deep color and flavor come from the brown roux.

_Dirty rice: Rice cooked with ground chicken or turkey livers and gizzards, onions, chicken broth, bacon drippings, green pepper and garlic.

_Muffaletta: An oversized sandwich on a round loaf of crusty Italian bread, split and filled with layers of provolone cheeps, Genoa salami and ham, then topped with olive salad, a chopped mixture of green, unstuffed olives, pimientos, celery, garlic, cocktail onions, capers, oregano, parsley, olive oil, red-wine vinegar, salt and pepper. The olive salad is what sets the muffaletta apart.

_Po'boy: A submarine- or hero-style sandwich typically filled with fried fish or shellfish and served on a fresh baguette. Ordering it "dressed" means it will come topped with shredded lettuce, tomatoes, mayonnaise and pickles.

___

Sources:

Food Network: http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/ck_encyclopedia/

Cafe du Monde: http://www.cafedumonde.com/

French policeman shot in clashes with youths

A French police officer was shot and wounded during clashes with youths that broke out after a teenager died while fleeing police, authorities said Tuesday.

The officer appeared to have been shot in the leg with a hunting rifle, said the police prefecture in Romans-sur-Isere, a southeastern town located 60 miles from Lyon in the Rhone Valley on the edge of the Alps. The officer's life was not in danger. Dents from bullets and buckshot were also found in police vehicles nearby.

Police used tear gas and rubber pellets to push back some 50 youths during clashes late Monday and early Tuesday. Several cars were burned and about 15 shop windows were smashed.

After nightfall Tuesday, some 300 riot police officers and gendarmes took up positions around the center of town to prevent a second night of clashes. Some teams of officers were brought in from neighboring regions.

The violence broke out after a 16-year-old died by driving a stolen car into a wall while fleeing police. Four other minors in the car were lightly injured.

Accidents involving police and youths have been particularly sensitive in France since riots in 2005 that were sparked by the deaths of two teens electrocuted in a power substation while hiding from police.

Jean-Pierre Nahon, a prosecutor in the regional capital, Valence, said a police watchdog agency will investigate latest incident.

Nahon said that, according to a preliminary investigation, the five teenagers had stolen the car overnight and were driving at high speed through the center of Romans-sur-Isere when police began chasing them. The young driver took a sharp turn and lost control of the car, running into a wall.

US soldier killed by roadside bomb north of Iraqi capital

The U.S. military says an American soldier has been killed by a roadside bomb that hit his vehicle north of Baghdad.

The military says the soldier died Sunday in the attack, which took place in Iraq's Salahuddin province. The military's statement gave no further details and the name is the soldier is being withheld pending notification of his family.

The death brings to at least 4,080 the number of members of the U.S. military who have died in the Iraq war since it began in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

Worm's world // Rodman finds niche as action star

Dennis Rodman, star of basketball, books, pro wrestling and nowmovies, claims to be still a little stunned by the spotlight. Andwith the opening Friday of "Double Team," the new Jean-Claude VanDamme action thriller, the media glare has even intensified.

"I never ever expected that my career would turn into such amedia hype," he said in an interview last week before the movie'sgala premiere here. (Nationwide, the film was a box-officedisappointment, pulling in $5 million; see Page 31.)

"In San Antonio (where he played with the Spurs), I was doingthe same thing, but I guess the media are stronger in Chicago, andbeing linked with Michael Jordan and a championship team didn'thurt."He is, he told me, really a private person. No, really. "Ihave my own little collection of toys - people - who I hang out with,and that's it. But once the cameras and the mikes are in front ofme, I turn into this big diva."What people need to understand, he said, is "growing up inthe projects, I never had a youth. Today, I'm having the teenageyears I never had. I have the freedom to go out and have a goodtime. I decided to revert 10 years, and then grow up. I'm what?Inside, I'm 17, 18 years old right now."Our conversation - a portion of which ran in last week'sSun-Times - continued:Q. By the end of the movie, what did you know that youdidn't know on the first day?A. Well, I knew that I could act. I felt real comfortable.At first I was leery and nervous because I didn't know how to projectmyself in front of the camera, but as days went by, all of a sudden,I started feeling really comfortable, really more big, you know, tobe in there.Q. So this is something you think you can do.A. I can do action movies.Q. You see this as a career after basketball?A. I think it's a career now. I've been doing it for somany years, acting and performing and entertaining people, and now Ihave to put it in a different form without a uniform.Q. Michael Jordan waited a long time before finally pickinga movie project to star in. What kind of process did you go through?How did you choose this one?A. They just came to me with a project and "Hey, why don'tyou play this character, his name is Yaz," and they basically broughtthe character to life as Dennis Rodman.Q. I heard that Jackie Chan gave you some pointers onaction scenes.A. He did. He told me, when you kick, you kick sharp andyou kick believable, and then people believe that you actually arekicking and hitting the guy. And when you punch, you go through thepunch, you go through it and you snap it back. I didn't do all thekarate moves like Bruce Lee, that kind of crap, but he taught me theaction scenes where I have to deliver the punches.Q. You've been quoted as saying that if the Bulls win theNBA championship again, you'll be back, and if they don't, you won't.A. I'm just being realistic here. I got so many people inmy corner, but a lot of people actually wanna see Dennis Rodman fail.They say the hell with him, he's caused too many problems for thisteam. But then they say, we can't win without you, we need you, wecan't win without you. So they're walking on both sides of thefence. If we don't win, I'm pretty sure they won't have me back.Q. Would you go to someplace like Los Angeles, where yourflamboyance might be more welcome?A. I think I'll go to the Lakers, but my first choice wouldbe the Bulls. They wanna offer me less money, I'll still play here.I owe the people of Chicago a lot because they gave me opportunities,so I'm not gonna let them down.Q. You were playing for a long time before you came toChicago, but it was here that really you captured everyone'simagination.A. Right. It's amazing. I've been in (the NBA) for 11years, and all of a sudden, I'm everywhere. "Dennis Rodman - Iremember that guy when he was nobody." I never expected none of thisstuff to happen. I'm just Dennis Rodman being a real human beinglike anyone else in the world is trying to be, but I'm just doing itmore flamboyantly, that's all.Q. Your relationship with Jordan, is it kind of like arivalry with a brother or . . .A. People are saying Dennis Rodman and Michael Jordan arefeuding over who can get the most spotlight, the most publicity.It's nothing like that! We respect each other because he has hislife, I have my life. So once we come together, it's on thebasketball floor. That's the most important time we need to have.We're like playing a game of checkers. You move here, I gotta movehere. Move here, I gotta move here. So that's the way it is. Offthe court, we're on our own, you know.Q. You generate a lot of publicity, but then there'spublicity that you don't necessarily want, like when your father cameto see you at a Bulls game, or the reports about your affair withMadonna or now this book by your ex-wife. How do you feel aboutthat?A. "As the Worm Turns." It seems like I should have a soapopera. People just wanna jump in the bathtub with me. It's, like,"Let me jump in, too, let me tell my story." My father - I don'tknow who this man is, who wants to come back and he's in the standssigning autographs like he's the superstar. "That's my son."Really? Where were you 30 years ago?And my ex-wife, she jumped off the boat, and all of a suddennow she wants to live vicariously through me. And the sad thingabout this is, now my child's involved. So that's the worst thingabout that. And as for Madonna, I opened my mouth when I shouldn'thave did, and it cost me a friendship. But it happened.Q. You have a book coming out this month. What's called?A. It's called Walk on the Wild Side. And it's definitelya walk on the wild side.Q. Howard Stern had a bestseller that he made into a movie.Now you've got two books that could be made into movies. But theywould be a little more R-rated or even NC-17, wouldn't they?A. I think it would be more PG-13.Q. PG-13?A. I think if people look in my books they will really geta concept of Dennis Rodman. They'll get a feel of what their livescan bring them and what they can do. With the Walk on the Wild Sidebook coming out, people are gonna say - damn, this guy, I mean, hereally lived the life. He really lived to the fullest. If you hangaround me a while, you say he wants it all, he does it all, and heenjoys it.

Fed's No. 2 Kohn sees gradual recovery in 2009

Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Donald L. Kohn said steadier consumer spending and home sales, together with favorable earnings results from some banks, may indicate that the U.S. economy is poised to stage a gradual recovery later this year.

The Fed's No. 2 official, delivering the annual Hutchinson lecture at the University of Delaware Monday evening, noted that consumer spending continues to suffer the effects of the poor job market and the sizable losses of equity and housing wealth over the past two years.

But he said consumption appears to have steadied in comparison to the sharp drops seen in the second half of 2008, and declines in sales and construction of single-family homes have abated _ possibly because of low mortgage interest rates.

Kohn also noted that the plunge in energy prices has helped bolster real incomes and gives consumers much-needed cash to spend elsewhere.

"These developments may be an early indication that conditions are falling into place for real GDP to decline at a slower rate in the second quarter and to stabilize later this year," Kohn said.

Kohn noted that low confidence about future economic and job prospects is still crimping people's willingness to spend. Tight credit conditions _ especially for commercial construction _ also could hinder a recovery, as could weak exports in the face of global economic issues.

"My best guess is that we are in for a relatively gradual recovery," he added.

Kohn pointed to the Federal Reserve's role in helping to counter the financial crisis and its economic fallout. The central bank has slashed a key interest rate essentially to zero and launched a series of programs designed to get credit to flow more freely again to American consumers and businesses and thus help revive the U.S. economy.

With all of the Fed's programs to provide loans or buy debt, its balance sheet has ballooned. The Fed recently injected $1.2 trillion into the economy in an attempt to lower interest rates for mortgages and other loans, and may expand a program to spur consumer lending.

Some critics are concerned that the Fed's policies could spur inflation if key interest rates are not quickly increased and special lending programs are not dismantled once the economy shows strong signs of turning around.

Kohn said near-term prospects appear to be for a decline in inflation rather than an increase, but he said the Fed is "acutely aware" of the risk of higher inflation as the economic recovery gains speed.

"We are firmly committed to acting in a way that preserves price stability, and we believe we have the tools to absorb reserves and raise interest rates when needed," he said.

Kohn's comments come ahead of next week's meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, the Fed's policymaking body, at which Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues will assess economic and financial conditions. U.S. companies are turning in surprisingly good quarterly earnings but economists say a recovery is probably still months away.

Bernanke said recently that he has seen "tentative signs" the recession may be easing, including improvements in recent data on home and auto sales, home building and consumer spending. But he also warned that any lasting recovery is linked to the government's success in stabilizing shaky financial markets and getting credit to flow again.

Over-limit mum crashed her vehicle

A MOTHER-OF-TWO crashed her car while nearly three times thedrink drive the drink drive limit after arguing with her partner ata function in Carmarthen.

Appearing before Llanelli magistrates last Wednesday, AmberElaine Overend, 35, of Cenarth Close, Pembroke Dock, admitteddriving her Renault Laguna car while over the legal limit onCarmarthen's Coracle Way on October 2. An intoxilyser reading of 96micrograms of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath was recorded, thelegal limit being 35.

Magistrates heard Overend had earlier drunk eight or nine pintsof lager and a spirit shot.

Prosecuting, Ellie Morgan said police saw Overend drive herRenault around the B&Q roundabout at the edge of Carmarthen shortlybefore 7pm despite it having a flat front tyre.

After the car was stopped, police saw the front bumper wasmissing and the off-side wing was damaged.

Overend said she had clipped the Morfa Lane roundabout and hit aroad sign.

Magistrates hear Overend had attended a function at the Ivy BushHotel in Spilman Street and had booked a room to stay there, leavingafter an argument with her partner.

Defending, Kate Williams said Overend, a part-time pharmacyassistant, had no previous convictions. Overend was banned fromdriving for 24 months, was fined Pounds 115, with costs of Pounds 85and a surcharge of Pounds 15.

Joan Viscountess Camrose, 89

LONDON Joan Viscountess Camrose, mother of the Aga Khan,spiritual leader of the world's 15 million Ismaili Muslims, has diedat age 89.

The cause of her death Friday was not given.

Born Joan Barbara Yarde-Buller, the daughter of an actress andthe 3rd Lord Churston, she married well three times: first to amember of the Guinness brewing family, then to Prince Aly Khan, andfinally to Lord Camrose.Her first marriage, to Loel Guinness, ended in divorce in 1936.She then married Aly Khan, son of the immensely rich Aga Khan III.The couple had two sons, Princes Karim and Amyn. Karim waschosen to succeed his grandfather as Aga Khan IV in 1957.Aly Khan had by that time divorced his wife to marry actressRita Hayworth. But Princess Joan remained on good terms with herfather-in-law, and when her son became Aga Khan, she accompanied himto his accession ceremonies in Africa and India.

U.S. and Iraqi Forces Move on Insurgents

BAGHDAD - U.S. and Iraqi forces launched attacks on the capital's northern and southern flanks to clear out Sunni insurgents, al-Qaida fighters and Shiite militiamen who were chased from the capital and Anbar province during the first four months of the Baghdad security operation, military officials said Monday.

A top U.S. military official said American forces were taking advantage of the arrival of final brigade of 30,000 addition American forces to open the concerted attacks.

"We are going into the areas that have been sanctuaries of al-Qaida and other extremists to take them on and weed them out, to help get the areas clear and to really take on al-Qaida," the senior official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about the operation. "Those are areas in the belts around Baghdad, some parts in Anbar province and specifically Diyala province."

Al-Qaida has proved an extremely agile foe for U.S. and Iraqi forces, as shown by its ability to transfer major operations to Baqouba from Anbar province, the sprawling desert region in western Iraq. There was no guarantee driving the organization out of current sanctuaries would prevent it from migrating to other regions to continue the fight.

The death toll in sectarian violence Monday skyrocketed after a brief period of relative peace. At least 110 people were killed or found dead Monday, with 33 tortured bodies showing up in Baghdad alone.

The U.S. military also announced a soldier was killed by a roadside bomb while on a foot patrol the day before in southern Baghdad. The death raised to at least 3,527 members of the U.S. military who have died since the Iraq war started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

Well to the south, Iraqi officials reported as many as 36 people were killed in fierce overnight fighting that began as British and Iraqi forces conducted house-to-house searches in Amarah, a stronghold of the Shiite Mahdi Army militia.

The U.S. military issued a statement that said at least 20 people were killed in clashes with coalition forces, without disclosing their nationality. A spokeswoman for Britain's Ministry of Defense said that the British soldiers played a supporting role to Iraqi security forces during the raid and fighting. She spoke on condition of anonymity, which is ministry policy.

The operations on Baghdad's flanks were opened by the U.S. 3rd Infantry Division, which has taken over dangerous al-Qaida-infested regions to the south. The division began its drive into the Salman Pak and Arab Jabour districts on the city's southeastern fringe over the weekend.

At the time ground forces commander Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno said U.S. troops were heading into those areas in force for the first time in three years.

The military said in a statement Monday fighter jets dropped "four precision-guided bombs" in support of 1,200 U.S. soldiers from the 3rd Infantry as they started moving on al-Qaida targets.

Military officials said Multi-National Division-North forces likewise were increasing pressure on al-Qaida sanctuaries in the verdant orange and palm groves of Diyala province and its capital Baqouba, now one of the most fiercely contested regions in Iraq.

The province is a tangle of Shiite and Sunni villages that has played into the hands of al-Qaida and allied militants who have melted into the tense region and sought to inflame existing sectarian troubles.

Al-Qaida has conducted public executions in the Baqouba main square and otherwise sought to enforce extreme Taliban-style Islamic code. The terror organization's actions in the province have caused some Sunni militants, al-Qaida's natural allies, to turn their guns on the group, with American assistance and blessing. Some militant Shiites are likewise joining government forces in a bid to oust the foreign fighters and Muslim extremists.

Multi-National Division-Baghdad, which has run the security operation in the capital since it began on Feb. 14, has increased pressure on districts to the northwest of the city to cut supply and reinforcement lines from Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province in western Iraq, to the Baqouba region.

"We're focusing up in the northwest to apply force in an area that's been important to al-Qaida and its associates as they move between Ramadi and Baqouba. That work together with the developing efforts to provide local security through the (Sunni) tribes in Abu Ghraib and Amariyah is putting pressure on al-Qaida," said Lt. Col. Scott Bleichwehl, division spokesman.

The U.S. military said its Baghdad force had uncovered six Iranian-made rockets Sunday in a school yard that was suspected of being a launching site against the heavily fortified Green Zone in the capital.

Some Sunni tribes, who had fought with or offered sanctuary to al-Qaida in Anbar province, have risen up against the group and are now receiving arms and training from U.S. forces. American military officials are trying to spread that success to al-Qaida areas now under attack.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, however, told visiting Defense Minister William Gates last week that the United States should stop arming Sunnis who may have been part of the insurgency, according to officials in his office, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information. Al-Maliki repeated that challenge in a television interview in Baghdad on Monday.

The fighting in Amarah, the U.S. military said in a statement, was a targeted operation against what the coalition said were members of a "secret cell" that imported deadly armor-piercing weapons made in Iran known as "explosively formed penetrators," or EFPs. The cells were also were suspected of bringing militants from Iraq to Iran for terror training.

A doctor at Amarah's general hospital said 36 bodies had been taken to his facility, though he could not determine how many were militiamen and how many were civilians. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to media.

More than 100 people were injured in the fighting, and at least three of those killed were Iraqi policemen, police and hospital officials said.

Coalition forces came under small arms fire and rocket-propelled grenade attacks during the raids, and called in air support, the U.S. military statement said. The suspects were killed by fire from aircraft, it said, without disclosing whether the forces were American or British.

Iraqi police said the Mahdi Army, the militia commanded by radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, was involved in the clashes, which lasted for about two hours before dawn.

Amarah is the provincial capital of Maysan province, a predominantly Shiite region that borders Iran. Iraqi forces took over control of security from British troops there in April.

The city has seen intense militia fighting, most recently in October 2006, when the Mahdi Army briefly took control of the city and fought prolonged gunbattles with local police. At the time, Amarah's police force was believed to be dominated by a rival militia, the Badr Brigades. More than 30 people were killed in the standoff.

---

AP correspondent Kim Gamel contributed to this report from Baghdad.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Advice for Student Borrowers

If they haven't already, millions of seniors graduating from high school will turn their attention over the next few weeks to paying for college.

Scholarships and grants - which don't have to be paid back - are the best option, of course. But not everyone has the academic record for merit aid, or a great jump shot that would earn a sports scholarship. About two-thirds of four-year college students who graduate do so with some debt - typically about $19,000.

Many are confused by the patchwork of programs and options for borrowing, and get stuck with more debt than they should. And this year, there's a new wrinkle: An investigation by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has exposed questionable financial arrangements - he calls them "kickbacks" - involving lending companies and universities. Cuomo also has accused the Education Department of being asleep at the switch in regulating the $85 billion industry.

The whole situation has called into question whether the advice many students get is really unbiased. The Associated Press collected advice from published resources and some independent experts on borrowing for college.

In question-and-answer form, this is their advice.

---

Q: Where should I look for a loan first?

A: That one's easy: Uncle Sam.

The federal government helps students borrow in several ways: through direct loans, by subsidizing interest payments, and by encouraging private lenders to lend to students. Which of these programs you qualify for depends on your school and level of need.

In virtually all cases, government loans are a better deal than private loans, so max them out before borrowing elsewhere.

---

Q: How do I get started?

A: Fill out the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) form at the Department of Education Web site. It's kind of a pain, but it's worth it. If you plan to attend next fall, and haven't yet filled out the FAFSA, you may have missed some deadlines for state aid or aid from your college. But it's not too late to get federal aid. If you're planning for college further down the line, the Education Department's Web site has a new FAFSA calculator that will estimate what kind of federal aid you're eligible for.

---

Q: What kind of loans will I be offered?

A: The chief federal loan program is the Stafford loan, which will let dependent freshmen borrow up to $3,500 next year (more for upperclassmen). For students with high financial need, the government pays interest on at least a portion of that while you're in school. But anyone - regardless of family income - can take out an unsubsidized Stafford, which still lets you defer payments until after graduation.

Depending on your school, you may be offered a Stafford directly from the government. Or you may take out a government-guaranteed Stafford loan that's provided by private lenders such as banks.

If you have high need, you may also be offered a Perkins loan. That's also subsidized by the government, and a great deal, with 5 percent interest and other favorable terms. But the borrowing limits are $4,000 per year for undergraduates.

---

Q: I've borrowed what I can through these programs but it's not enough. What now?

A: Here's where it starts to get tricky.

One option is for your parents to borrow money for you, through a PLUS loan - another government program. Parents can borrow up to the full cost of attendance (including room and board and books), and one advantage for parents is they can consolidate these loans later.

But there are big downsides for parents, too. The biggest is that parents - not their children - are on the hook. And many experts tell parents to fund their own retirement savings before taking out a loan to pay for college for their children. There are lots of ways for students to pay for college, but it's very hard to catch up on retirement savings, says Ivan Nalibotsky, a financial aid adviser with Capital Solutions Group in Bethesda, Md.

If you're a parent who wants to help your kids and need to borrow, Nalibotsky suggests considering a home equity loan - then using the proceeds to pay for college. Factoring in the tax advantages, home equity loan rates may compare favorably with PLUS on private student loans.

---

Q: My folks say I'm on my own. What now?

A: You may have to consider a private loan. Don't worry - you're in good company. Over the past decade, private borrowing for education has grown 10 times faster than borrowing from the government, and totaled about $16 billion last year.

---

Q: How should I choose a private loan, with all these conflicts of interest I've been reading about?

A. The recent controversies have raised questions about colleges' incentives to include certain lenders on preferred lists, but the experts agree they're still a good place to start.

Colleges generally put lenders on their list based on such factors as low rates, good service and clarity of their policies. It's good to use their expertise

Still, given the various student loan investigations, it's worth taking one more step: Ask a financial aid official the criteria for preferred lenders at your school (new federal measures in the works may make this information more transparent). If you see only one company listed, or are told the school has an arrangement with the lender that provides it indirect revenue, you may want to consider other lenders. Remember: You have the right to borrow from any lender you choose, not just those on the list.

That said, be careful, particularly if you venture off the list. Read the fine print. You might be offered a loan with a highly attractive introductory rate. But few students typically have the credit scores to be eligible for that rate, and it might balloon after a few years.

In considering any private loan, you'll probably be offered different kinds of incentives. Think carefully about which ones are most valuable to you.

Many private lenders will lower your rate for making, say, 44 consecutive on-time payments. Sounds great, but most students don't manage to do that, says Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of the Web site finaid.org. He advises choosing upfront discounts like reduced fees that you're sure to get.

You can compare loan offers on a number of Web sites, but Kantrowitz says the only way to find out exactly what terms you'll get is to apply. But don't apply to too many - that could lower your credit rating.

---

Q. How much should I borrow?

A. As little as you can. "Live like a student when you're in school so you don't have to live like a student after you graduate," Nalibotsky says.

The average loan debt of $19,000 is manageable for most people, and median debt levels have leveled off in recent years after sharp rises in the 1990s, according to the College Board. But excessive debts can hamstring you for decades, limiting your cash flow and career options. A common rule of thumb is don't take on more debt than your expected first-year salary.

Where it gets tricky is deciding whether to borrow a bit more so you can work less and attend school full-time. There's not easy answer there, but keep in mind at large schools, it takes most students longer than four years to graduate.

For many students, a part-time job and full course load is manageable, but a full-time job may impede progress to graduation. You're better off borrowing enough to focus on your studies than flunking out or staying in school forever.

---

On the Net:

http://www.fafsa.ed.gov/

http://www.finaid.org

http://www.bankrate.com

http://www.simpletuition.com

Musical treats for members

THE next event to be held by Carmarthen Arts will be the members'evening, open to members and their guests.

The event will be held at the former Bishop's Palace that is nowCarmarthenshire County Museum, Abergwili, on Friday, December 10.

Catrin Lewis, soprano, accompanied by Meinir Jones Parry, will beperforming.

The next open event will be a concert by the Wilhelm Quartet atthe Ivy Bush Royal Hotel on Spilman Street on February 6. CarmarthenArts is supported by the Arts Council of Wales.

Russian spacesuit fetches $242,000 at NYC auction

NEW YORK (AP) — A Russian spacesuit worn during the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz Test Project skyrocketed to $242,000 at a New York City auction.

Bonhams had estimated it at $100,000 to $150,000. The auction house didn't disclose the buyer of the Sokol K pressure suit.

The Apollo-Soyuz marked the first multinational manned spaceflight. Soyuz commander Alexei Leonov wore the white nylon canvas suit during docking, launch and re-entry.

Another highlight of the Thursday sale was a brass neck tag worn by HAM, the first chimpanzee launched into outer space during the American space program.

HAM wore the No. 65 tag aboard the Mercury-Redstone in 1961. It sold for $12,200, surpassing its pre-sale estimate of $2,000-$3,000.

The auction was held on the 50th anniversary of the first American in space, Mercury astronaut Alan Shepard.

AMERICAN LEAGUE BITS

Don Buford, a bench coach with the Orioles, Monday was namedBaltimore's minor league director of field operations andinstruction.

Buford, 51, replaces Lance Nichols, who left the organizationearlier this month to become director of player development for thePhiladelphia Phillies.

Buford, who played for the White Sox and Orioles, was first basecoach for San Francisco from 1981 through 1984 when the Giants weremanaged by current Orioles manager Frank Robinson. Gary Gaetti, one of the leaders of the Minnesota Twins' drive totheir first World Series title last year, may miss the rest of thisseason after undergoing arthroscopic knee surgery.

Wintour's counterpart at Vogue is quiet powerhouse

No doubt about it, Anna Wintour is the brains behind Vogue. Nothing brings that into clearer focus than the new documentary "The September Issue."

But the film exposes someone else at the magazine's heart: Creative Director Grace Coddington.

Coddington seems to pump passion and artistic integrity into the pages while not being swept up in the celebrity frenzy that seems synonymous with fashion these days. She's not quite the picture of glamour, either, with her wiry red hair, an almost entirely black wardrobe and a series of hippie-ish shoes that look more Birkenstock than Manolo Blahnik.

And yet when the Vogue staff wrapped up the September issue of 2007, the biggest in the title's 117-year history, Coddington could say that she drove all but one of the main fashion features _ the semi-disastrous cover shoot with Sienna Miller.

In fact, she does say it, and uses a tone that seems smug and is a bit of a dig at Wintour, who had doubted some of Coddington's plans. "I meant it tongue-in-cheek, but I do make those remarks. Unfortunately not everyone sees it the same way I do," she says.

That was always fine _ at least until the film, which chronicles the back and forth between the two strong-willed women and opens in New York on Aug. 28 and select cities on Sept. 11.

"It was a complete surprise to me that, in the movie, I'm in quite a lot. ... There are cameras around Vogue a lot _ there are cameras around Anna a lot, but I usually end up on the cutting-room floor," Coddington says.

"They filmed for months before they turned the cameras on me at all. Anna had given them complete access so they were a bit annoyed when I kept slamming the door in their faces. And when it came to the shoots for that issue, she basically said, `They are coming along and it's not an option.' ... But once they started coming on all the shoots, there was no point in being grumpy about it."

The relationship between Coddington, camera and crew evolved into a warm one, and Coddington, 68, comes off as the unsung heroine. "If you can't beat them, join them _ and I liked them," she says of the filmmakers.

Filmmaker RJ Cutler went into Vogue unsure of the story he wanted to tell, other than to offer a more intimate glimpse of Wintour, who wields power like few others in both fashion and publishing. He spent more than 8 months inside Vogue's hallowed halls at Conde Nast headquarters.

The movie shows how top designers are at Wintour's beck and call, and that her power-broker reputation is not unwarranted. She comes across not as unkind but as a cool perfectionist, and she rarely lets her guard down.

The "defining dynamic" in the workplace was Wintour and Coddington, Cutler says. "There was rawness, energy, excitement and conflict."

And more than a little bit of drama.

Asked about his favorite moments, all of Cutler's choices featured Coddington, like the day she came to cinematographer Bob Richman saying, "I have an idea."

She tapped him as a prop in a photo shoot with model Caroline Trentini. The final picture had him jumping in the air, equipment and all.

Wintour liked it _ but made the comment that Richman's belly would need to be airbrushed to a slimmer shape; Coddington wouldn't hear of it. If the atmosphere captured by "The September Issue" is true to life, Coddington is the only one who stands up to Wintour that way.

"I think we both respect each other, or at least we both say that in the movie. I infuriate her, she infuriates me, and we're both a bit stubborn, but we're always respectful," Coddington says. "I think she's an amazing editor."

Cutler and Richman, meanwhile, developed a genuine affection for Coddington.

"She is charming, delightful, passionate and so committed to celebrating beauty and her revolutionary notion that clothes, models and photographers could tell stories and not just be objects," Cutler says. "Every billboard, fashion magazine spread, every advertisement we see today has been influenced by Grace Coddington."

Richman says with a laugh, though, that Wintour certainly made a lasting impression on him: "I do go to the gym now all the time. It was probably the heaviest I've ever been, shooting that _ and that was my 15 minutes."

Coddington started her career in front of the lens, winning a modeling contest sponsored by British Vogue in 1959. She switched roles to become an editor a decade later, after a car accident. Coddington says she and Wintour ran in the same circles in London and both came to the U.S. in the late '80s.

(Calvin Klein hired Coddington as design director in 1987 but she joined Wintour at Vogue, on Wintour's very first day as editor in chief there, in 1988.)

Coddington sounds wistful for the old days of fashion and magazines when the artfulness of the clothes was what mattered most. She really has no use for any Hollywood hoopla.

"I stay far away from the celebrities. I am not very good with them. Normally I don't like to shoot actresses because I lose sight of fashion when I do and I love fashion," she says. "They like to dictate the hair, the makeup, the clothes, the photographer _ and that's annoying. I like to do that."

Never mind that she's a film star now.

"A lot of people have said they've seen it (`The September Issue') but I don't think it'll change my life," she says. "I don't think I'll be Sarah Jessica Parker and not be able to go down the street."

First night gets thumbs up: ; Beer sales slow as teens, families pack boulevard

DAILY MAIL

Ten-year-old Brandon Dodrill, above, of Hurricane did a high-flying act over the Regatta crowds on Kanawha Boulevard while tryingout the Power Jump. Even when the rain came, Elliot Sloan, below, ofBlessid Union of Souls kept the crowd excited at the opening day ofthe Charleston Sternwheel Regatta.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Landis Says No Purpose in Him Cheating

MALIBU, Calif. - Though he's convinced his reputation is ruined, Floyd Landis still had to give it his best shot. He took to the witness stand at his arbitration hearing Saturday for his much-awaited testimony and found 50 different ways to say he didn't cheat.

"It's a matter of who I am," last year's Tour de France champion testified. "It wouldn't serve any purpose for me to cheat and win the Tour, because I wouldn't be proud of it. That wasn't the goal to begin with."

Wearing that familiar yellow tie, a gray suit and blue shirt, Landis spoke clearly and kept on point during a 75-minute dissection of his career, which was thrown wildly off track when he tested positive …

Gutless wonder: new symbiosis lets worm feed on whale bones.(This Week)(Osedax)

Deep-sea researchers have discovered an oddball worm that uses a previously unknown type of symbiosis to feed on whale skeletons--even though the worms have no mouth or gut.

Some other worms from the deep have no digestive systems but depend on live in bacteria for nourishment, explains Robert Vrijenhoek of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California. The whale bone-raiding worms, in the newly named genus Osedax, likewise rely on symbiotic bacteria. The microbes, from the order Oceanospirillales, reside in green, rootlike growths at a female worm's base. However, the symbionts in female Osedax target an unusual food source--lipids from whale bones that have fallen to the ocean floor--Vrijenhoek and his colleagues report in the July 30 Science.

"We know of no other animal symbiont able to extract lipids," says Vrijenhoek.

The males play out an entirely different nutritional tale. More than 100 tiny males can live inside the sheath that surrounds the female's elongated body. The males don't appear to be parasitic and probably feed off yolk left over from early development. Vrijenhoek rates the males as "little more than larvae."

While females can grow to the size of an index finger, a robust male reaches only 0.3 millimeter in length. "It's the most dramatic sexual dimorphism among worms and may be among the most dramatic in the animal kingdom," says Vrijenhoek.

He and his colleagues discovered Osedax during a 2002 research cruise in Monterey Bay. Their remotely operated craft detected a dead gray whale in the mud at 2,800 meters underwater. "The bones were a carpet of red worms," Vrijenhoek remembers.

The red came from hemoglobin-rich plumes topping the females' stalklike bodies. The craft picked up samples, which went to worm expert Greg Rouse of the South Australian Museum in Adelaide, Australia.

Rouse, a coauthor of the new paper, at first hesitated to identify the new creatures as worms. For one thing, the tubeworms known from deep-sea vents live in hard outer casings, yet the new creatures are sheathed in soft mucus. However, DNA evidence convinced Vrijenhoek that these were indeed relatives of worms from hydrothermal vents. Rouse subsequently found additional evidence for this relationship from his own morphological studies.

Even though the animals don't have mouths, their bacteria-bearing projections penetrate the whale bones. Unpublished experiments comparing the nitrogen isotopes in worms and whale bones suggest that the bacteria are indeed metabolizing lipids from the whales, says Vrijenhoek.

Whale bones are some 60 percent lipids, notes Craig Smith of the University of Hawaii in Manoa, a longtime observer of sunken whale carcasses. He has estimated that 600,000 whale skeletons lie on ocean floors, offering feeding bonanzas for a community of creatures that's barely known. "I think there are a lot of discoveries to be made," says Smith.

Gutless wonder: new symbiosis lets worm feed on whale bones.(This Week)(Osedax)

Deep-sea researchers have discovered an oddball worm that uses a previously unknown type of symbiosis to feed on whale skeletons--even though the worms have no mouth or gut.

Some other worms from the deep have no digestive systems but depend on live in bacteria for nourishment, explains Robert Vrijenhoek of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California. The whale bone-raiding worms, in the newly named genus Osedax, likewise rely on symbiotic bacteria. The microbes, from the order Oceanospirillales, reside in green, rootlike growths at a female worm's base. However, the symbionts in female Osedax target an unusual food source--lipids from whale bones that have fallen to the ocean floor--Vrijenhoek and his colleagues report in the July 30 Science.

"We know of no other animal symbiont able to extract lipids," says Vrijenhoek.

The males play out an entirely different nutritional tale. More than 100 tiny males can live inside the sheath that surrounds the female's elongated body. The males don't appear to be parasitic and probably feed off yolk left over from early development. Vrijenhoek rates the males as "little more than larvae."

While females can grow to the size of an index finger, a robust male reaches only 0.3 millimeter in length. "It's the most dramatic sexual dimorphism among worms and may be among the most dramatic in the animal kingdom," says Vrijenhoek.

He and his colleagues discovered Osedax during a 2002 research cruise in Monterey Bay. Their remotely operated craft detected a dead gray whale in the mud at 2,800 meters underwater. "The bones were a carpet of red worms," Vrijenhoek remembers.

The red came from hemoglobin-rich plumes topping the females' stalklike bodies. The craft picked up samples, which went to worm expert Greg Rouse of the South Australian Museum in Adelaide, Australia.

Rouse, a coauthor of the new paper, at first hesitated to identify the new creatures as worms. For one thing, the tubeworms known from deep-sea vents live in hard outer casings, yet the new creatures are sheathed in soft mucus. However, DNA evidence convinced Vrijenhoek that these were indeed relatives of worms from hydrothermal vents. Rouse subsequently found additional evidence for this relationship from his own morphological studies.

Even though the animals don't have mouths, their bacteria-bearing projections penetrate the whale bones. Unpublished experiments comparing the nitrogen isotopes in worms and whale bones suggest that the bacteria are indeed metabolizing lipids from the whales, says Vrijenhoek.

Whale bones are some 60 percent lipids, notes Craig Smith of the University of Hawaii in Manoa, a longtime observer of sunken whale carcasses. He has estimated that 600,000 whale skeletons lie on ocean floors, offering feeding bonanzas for a community of creatures that's barely known. "I think there are a lot of discoveries to be made," says Smith.

Gutless wonder: new symbiosis lets worm feed on whale bones.(This Week)(Osedax)

Deep-sea researchers have discovered an oddball worm that uses a previously unknown type of symbiosis to feed on whale skeletons--even though the worms have no mouth or gut.

Some other worms from the deep have no digestive systems but depend on live in bacteria for nourishment, explains Robert Vrijenhoek of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California. The whale bone-raiding worms, in the newly named genus Osedax, likewise rely on symbiotic bacteria. The microbes, from the order Oceanospirillales, reside in green, rootlike growths at a female worm's base. However, the symbionts in female Osedax target an unusual food source--lipids from whale bones that have fallen to the ocean floor--Vrijenhoek and his colleagues report in the July 30 Science.

"We know of no other animal symbiont able to extract lipids," says Vrijenhoek.

The males play out an entirely different nutritional tale. More than 100 tiny males can live inside the sheath that surrounds the female's elongated body. The males don't appear to be parasitic and probably feed off yolk left over from early development. Vrijenhoek rates the males as "little more than larvae."

While females can grow to the size of an index finger, a robust male reaches only 0.3 millimeter in length. "It's the most dramatic sexual dimorphism among worms and may be among the most dramatic in the animal kingdom," says Vrijenhoek.

He and his colleagues discovered Osedax during a 2002 research cruise in Monterey Bay. Their remotely operated craft detected a dead gray whale in the mud at 2,800 meters underwater. "The bones were a carpet of red worms," Vrijenhoek remembers.

The red came from hemoglobin-rich plumes topping the females' stalklike bodies. The craft picked up samples, which went to worm expert Greg Rouse of the South Australian Museum in Adelaide, Australia.

Rouse, a coauthor of the new paper, at first hesitated to identify the new creatures as worms. For one thing, the tubeworms known from deep-sea vents live in hard outer casings, yet the new creatures are sheathed in soft mucus. However, DNA evidence convinced Vrijenhoek that these were indeed relatives of worms from hydrothermal vents. Rouse subsequently found additional evidence for this relationship from his own morphological studies.

Even though the animals don't have mouths, their bacteria-bearing projections penetrate the whale bones. Unpublished experiments comparing the nitrogen isotopes in worms and whale bones suggest that the bacteria are indeed metabolizing lipids from the whales, says Vrijenhoek.

Whale bones are some 60 percent lipids, notes Craig Smith of the University of Hawaii in Manoa, a longtime observer of sunken whale carcasses. He has estimated that 600,000 whale skeletons lie on ocean floors, offering feeding bonanzas for a community of creatures that's barely known. "I think there are a lot of discoveries to be made," says Smith.

Gutless wonder: new symbiosis lets worm feed on whale bones.(This Week)(Osedax)

Deep-sea researchers have discovered an oddball worm that uses a previously unknown type of symbiosis to feed on whale skeletons--even though the worms have no mouth or gut.

Some other worms from the deep have no digestive systems but depend on live in bacteria for nourishment, explains Robert Vrijenhoek of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California. The whale bone-raiding worms, in the newly named genus Osedax, likewise rely on symbiotic bacteria. The microbes, from the order Oceanospirillales, reside in green, rootlike growths at a female worm's base. However, the symbionts in female Osedax target an unusual food source--lipids from whale bones that have fallen to the ocean floor--Vrijenhoek and his colleagues report in the July 30 Science.

"We know of no other animal symbiont able to extract lipids," says Vrijenhoek.

The males play out an entirely different nutritional tale. More than 100 tiny males can live inside the sheath that surrounds the female's elongated body. The males don't appear to be parasitic and probably feed off yolk left over from early development. Vrijenhoek rates the males as "little more than larvae."

While females can grow to the size of an index finger, a robust male reaches only 0.3 millimeter in length. "It's the most dramatic sexual dimorphism among worms and may be among the most dramatic in the animal kingdom," says Vrijenhoek.

He and his colleagues discovered Osedax during a 2002 research cruise in Monterey Bay. Their remotely operated craft detected a dead gray whale in the mud at 2,800 meters underwater. "The bones were a carpet of red worms," Vrijenhoek remembers.

The red came from hemoglobin-rich plumes topping the females' stalklike bodies. The craft picked up samples, which went to worm expert Greg Rouse of the South Australian Museum in Adelaide, Australia.

Rouse, a coauthor of the new paper, at first hesitated to identify the new creatures as worms. For one thing, the tubeworms known from deep-sea vents live in hard outer casings, yet the new creatures are sheathed in soft mucus. However, DNA evidence convinced Vrijenhoek that these were indeed relatives of worms from hydrothermal vents. Rouse subsequently found additional evidence for this relationship from his own morphological studies.

Even though the animals don't have mouths, their bacteria-bearing projections penetrate the whale bones. Unpublished experiments comparing the nitrogen isotopes in worms and whale bones suggest that the bacteria are indeed metabolizing lipids from the whales, says Vrijenhoek.

Whale bones are some 60 percent lipids, notes Craig Smith of the University of Hawaii in Manoa, a longtime observer of sunken whale carcasses. He has estimated that 600,000 whale skeletons lie on ocean floors, offering feeding bonanzas for a community of creatures that's barely known. "I think there are a lot of discoveries to be made," says Smith.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Mercedes tumbles in quality study; Vehicles score below average on dependability index.

Byline: Mark Rechtin, Jim Henry

Mercedes-Benz took a blow to its quality image by falling below average in the latest J.D. Power Vehicle Dependability Index study.

It is the first time the German prestige marque has fallen below industry average since J.D. Power began the annual study in 1989.

Mercedes-Benz fell from 10th to 16th place in the 2002 study, which monitored 137 areas of 1998 vehicles still on the road. The 1998 model year was the introductory point of the M-class sport-utility, which was knocked at its launch for having questionable assembly line quality.

The fifth year of ownership is considered a critical stage, when many …

Internet ban blocked. (federal judge blocks enforcement of ban on computer transmission of 'indecent' material contained in new telecommunications law)(Brief Article)

Enforcement of the ban against transmission of "indecent" materials via computer contained in the new telecommunications law was blocked last week in federal court. A hearing will be held this week on the temporary restraining order issued by U.S. District …

ALBANY MAN CHARGED IN BURGLARY WITH WEAPON.(CAPITAL REGION)

ALBANY -- A 33-year-old city man was arrested Saturday and charged with two counts of first-degree burglary and criminal possession of a weapon, which police said was a serving fork.

Anthony Barnes, of 639 S. Pearl St., is accused of prying open a window …

Chicago still favored, with Rio next, for Olympics

The tense and tight battle to host the 2016 Olympics sped toward its climax with Chicago, backed by President Barack Obama's star power, the bookmakers' favorite Thursday after a long, emotional and at times acrimonious campaign.

The stakes are huge for all four cities _ Chicago, Rio de Janeiro, Tokyo, Madrid _ and for the International Olympic Committee. It faces the choice of sending the games to uncharted territory in South America, appealing to those committee members who believe the Olympics should touch all corners of the globe, or opting in tough economic times for more familiar and perhaps more lucrative ground in Europe, the United States and Asia.

The …

Family calls cop shootings 'police terrorism'

While he can no longer hug or talk to his father, he knows that his father is "in a better place."

But, the 8-year-old son of slain Chicago rapper Freddie "Latee" Wilson wants the Chicago police officers that fired the fatal shots that claimed his father's life in prison.

"I can't talk about it anymore because it will make me more upset than I already am," King Latee Oseiel, one of Wilson's sons, told the Defender after joining his family Friday at the Austin District police station.

The 34-year-old was shot multiple times by three officers last week during a traffic stop on the West Side, said liana Rosenzweig, chief administrator for the Independent Police Review …

Flight of Fancy.

A recently launched TVC for the Republic of Singapore Air Force tested the agency and film crew to the limit, requiring them to simulate overseas locations from a local shoot, as well as work with bad weather, untested talent, and ... even bees

Glamour is hardly the first word that springs to mind when one thinks of recruitment commercials, but agency Leo Burnett Singapore managed to do just that with its latest TVC for the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF).

Leo Burnett has held the RSAF account for a good 10 years, so when the client called for a tender in April last year for a corporate commercial that could be cut down into a recruitment ad, the agency was in good stead to deliver what the client wanted. What it delivered was beyond the call of duty: as its research showed that the organisation was already regarded as an elite institution, the agency suggested that it focus solely on a recruitment commercial. The client agreed, reversed its brief, and set the wheels in motion for this commercial that went on air in late February this year.

According to Kenneth Yap, group account director, "The client's brief was simple. The commercial was supposed to reflect the airforce as world-class and a choice employer that would train its people to their fullest potential through its technology." The agency's creative team presented this concept: a slick, glitzy commercial that profiles compelling characters with interesting hobbies such as archery and …